So now, the question about religious faith is, "Where's the evidence?" IOW, you don't have to "prove" the existence of God, just show me some evidence. — Mitchell
If the Scriptures are to count as evidence, then what about the Qu'ran, the Gita, the Upanishads, the Sutras, etc. It seems to me that citing Scripture as evidence for the existence of the divine puts the cart before the horse — Mitchell
But evidence is. — Mitchell
But I guess I didn't make it explicit enough.there are various degrees of faith required for various beliefs, and the more faith required, the less rational the belief is — JustSomeGuy
Evidence need not be, and indeed with regard to empirical knowledge, cannot be, "proof". — Mitchell
This is interesting to me, because I believe many of my own problems stem from the fact that I grew up with a concrete belief system. — anonymous66
Faith: strong belief in the doctrines of a religion, based on spiritual conviction rather than proof.
So, faith, by that definition, is irrational — TheMadFool
everything is faith-based. So, we can't criticize religious faith and turn a blind eye to the fact that everything is faith based. — TheMadFool
The point is that agnostic atheism/theism complicates matters unnecessarily. — darthbarracuda
We just want to know: do you believe God exists, or not? It's very simple, you're either a theist, an atheist, or in between as an agnostic — darthbarracuda
That's not what not being true means. True things are true, even when not proven to be. — BlueBanana
For something to be false is the same as it being not true — BlueBanana
lack of belief is agnosticism, not atheism — BlueBanana
a failure to provide a convincing argument for A does not entail ~A, logically. It just means there hasn't been a good argument for A; in the absence of all evidence for A, we may feel compelled to adopt ~A, but ~A still has not been demonstrated itself. Something about A has to be proven to be contradictory or incorrect for ~A to be proven. — darthbarracuda
Not unless you question the view and to do that you have to have the opposite view, and then the burden is on you as well — BlueBanana
What has happened here has been that you've misunderstood my argument, — Inter Alia
My argument is, and always has been, as above. — Inter Alia
How should we live? — anonymous66
Because knives and cars are useful. To make the same claim for religion you would have to point to some purpose that cannot be equally served without religion. Demonstrating that there is no such purpose has been the point of my comments — Inter Alia
You've missed the point of the harms religions have done. It's not to say "do not be religious because they are burning people at the stake" it's to say "do not be religious because they have burned people at the stake and this reveals something unsavoury about being religious, something potentially harmful" — Inter Alia
Modern secular culture may well have plenty of evils, but none of them are demonstrably the result of secularism. The inquisition was demonstrably the result of a fanatical devotion to the Catholic religion. The covering up of child abuse was definitely the consequence of unquestioned faith in the church. "Swap you chemical warfare for the Inquisition any day of the week" is a ridiculous argument, chemical weapons are not caused by secularism, the inquisition was caused by Catholicism. — Inter Alia
So say, I set up a cult which had a s its central tenets, opposition to slavery, the sanctity of free speech and the fact that the earth was hit by a meteorite 65 million years ago. You happen to believe in all those things too, are you now a member of my cult? No, of course you're not, your independently arrived at opinions of metaphysics, ethics, and earth history just happen to coincide with my. — Inter Alia
What would make you a part of my cult would be if you absolved yourself of personal judgement and adopted the tenets of my institution on faith. — Inter Alia
Both require a faith, but one continues to allow independent judgement on other aspects of metaphysics, world history and crucially ethics. — Inter Alia
That's how priests get away with abusing children such as recently with Cardinal Law's diocese, or here in England where we have recently heard of the Catholic orphanage which had three time the national average child mortality rate for nearly a hundred years and no-one stopped them. I thought I was in some war-torn state when I read the actual wording of the press release "the nuns declined to comment on how many bodies were in the mass grave". Are you seriously telling me that an institution which buries the children they've beaten to death in mass graves deserves one shred of respect? I don't care how many Catholics do good work for charity, if there's even a minuscule chance that something about their religion allowed or encouraged them to do this it should be banned immediately. — Inter Alia
I can't believe you're being so heartless about this, this is absolutely proven mass child abuse we're talking about and you're suggesting we wait until we have absolutely conclusive proof that the structure of religion helps abusers get away with it before we act. Why? — Inter Alia
It's not just religion, the same is true of institutional schools like boarding schools and many other organisations. The rate of offence in religious schools is no different to that in ordinary institutional schools — Inter Alia
1. Where? — Inter Alia
I never claimed that religion causes people to want to carry out these atrocities — Inter Alia
One way or another religion has 'caused' all these things — Inter Alia
The point is the guns help, without guns you cannot shot someone, so why not ban guns? — Inter Alia
so why encourage them? — Inter Alia
I tend to think he has much in common with Jewish mysticism — Wayfarer
I guess I have decided that he just not part of my core curriculum, as not everything can be. — Wayfarer
So how is his philosophy not just natural philosophy, or science, for that matter? — Wayfarer
↪Mitchell
How would you distinguish Pantheism, e.g. Spinoza or Hegel, from Panpsychism?
Less sure about Spinoza — Marty
Well they're not religious then are they? — Inter Alia
Most people say they are above average drivers but we know this is not mathematically possible, more heterosexual men say they've committed adultery than women but this is not technically possible. — Inter Alia
Are you seriously suggesting that where a direct link is found between an ideology and some aberrant behaviour we should do nothing about it? — Inter Alia
Oh god, you are! 130/yr per capita equivalent gun murders in the UK (with gun control) vs 11,004 in the US (without gun control). As Eddie Izzard says "I think the gun helps" — Inter Alia
I am also a "thin ice atheist" -- that is, I don't feel a lot of security in not believing in God. I've taken that position and haven't broken through the ice yet, so... we'll see what happens. — Bitter Crank
Since we're discussing human morality, I think it makes sense to discuss it in terms of human biological instinct, no? — CasKev
You can't have morality without context — CasKev
You can't agree that human survival is good, in the context of human biological motivation? How about avoidance of unwanted suffering? — CasKev